The Scotsman

Shapps orders Network Rail report into derailment

- By ALISON CAMPSIE

Network Rail has been ordered to inspect high-risk trackside slopes across Britain following the Aberdeensh­ire crash which left three people dead.

The infrastruc­ture body, which runs tracks and signalling on the rail network, will use in-house engineers, specialist contractor­s and helicopter surveys to assess dozens of sites with “similar characteri­stics” to the stretch of railway where an Aberdeen to Glasgow service derailed near Stonehaven on Wednesday.

Network Rail was warned about its resilience to severe weather just four weeks before the incident.

The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) noted a spike in landslips, demonstrat­ing the “vulnerabil­ity” of the railways.

It said there were six times more flooding events during 2019-2020 when compared to the 12 months before.

UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said at the Stonehaven crash scene yesterday he had given Network Rail until September 1 to send him an interim report on the resilience of the rail infrastruc­ture against extreme weather events.

He said he as aware of the ORR report.

Mr Shapps said: “The report said something that we all know to be true, that the climate is changing, flash floods are increasing, the hot weather, the balmy summer we have been having. All these are factors.

“One of the things I have asked Network Rail to do immediatel­y, in the next few hours and days is to do a very quick resilience check to make sure there isn’t another situation like this and to see if they can identify any issues.

“I have ordered a report from them, an interim, on my desk by September 1, where I want them to check the resilience of the whole UK network with a final report in the autumn.

Scottish Transport Secretary Michael Matheson said: “They (Network Rail) are well aware of our views about the need to make sure that we are taking forward the right types of mitigation­s that help to manage a challenge of these types of localised, intense weather events.”

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